MRS Meetings and Events

 

SF04.02.01 2023 MRS Spring Meeting

Intelligentsia of Nano-Architected Hierarchical Materials

When and Where

Apr 11, 2023
1:30pm - 2:00pm

Marriott Marquis, B2 Level, Golden Gate C3

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Julia Greer1,Seola Lee1,Max Saccone2,Widianto Moestopo3,Seneca Velling1

California Institute of Technology1,Stanford University2,Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory3

Abstract

Julia Greer1,Seola Lee1,Max Saccone2,Widianto Moestopo3,Seneca Velling1

California Institute of Technology1,Stanford University2,Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory3
Creation of reconfigurable and multi-functional materials can be achieved by incorporating architecture into material design. In our research,we design and fabricate three-dimensional (3D) nano-architected materials that can exhibit superior and often tunable thermal, photonic, electrochemical, biochemical, and mechanical properties at extremely low mass densities (lighter than aerogels), which renders them useful and enabling in many technological applications. Dominant properties of such meta-materials are driven by their multi-scale nature: from characteristic material microstructure (atoms) to individual constituents (nanometers) to structural components (microns) to overall architectures (millimeters and above).<br/>Our research is focused on fabrication and synthesis of nano- and micro-architected materials using 3D lithography, nanofabrication, and additive manufacturing (AM) techniques, as well as on investigating their mechanical, biochemical, electromechanical, and thermal properties as a function of architecture, constituent materials, and microstructural detail. Additive manufacturing (AM) represents a set of processes that fabricate complex 3D structures using a layer-by-layer approach, with some advanced methods attaining nanometer resolution and the creation of unique, multifunctional materials and shapes derived from a <i>photoinitiation-based chemical reaction</i> of custom synthesized resins and thermal post-processing. A type of AM, vat polymerization, has allowed for using hydrogels as precursors, and exploiting novel material properties, especially those that arise at the nano-scale and do not occur in conventional materials. The focus of this talk is on <u>additive manufacturing via vat polymerization and function-containing chemical synthesis</u> to create 3D nano- and micro-architected metals, ceramics, multifunctional metal oxides (nano-photonics, photocatalytic, piezoelectric, etc.), and metal-containing polymer complexes, etc., as well as demonstrate their potential in some real-use biomedical, protective, and sensing applications. I will describe how the choice of architecture, material, and external stimulus can elicit stimulus-responsive, reconfigurable, and multifunctional response.

Keywords

3D printing

Symposium Organizers

Michael Frazier, University of California, San Diego
Xiaoyue Ni, Duke University
Carlos Portela, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Xiaoxing Xia, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory

Publishing Alliance

MRS publishes with Springer Nature